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Freedom After College

Submitted by augustash on Mon, 2010-11-15 13:51

Sadly (or happily for some), life goes on after college. So does the fight for freedom.

Building friendships, networking, and growing the movement is critical after college. If our ideas are to be preserved and promoted, you need to stay involved. Plus, in a time when the individual seems to be ever more isolated and adrift, these groups can help plug you into social networks you can use.

Whether you're looking for ways to be involved socially, professionally, or both, we have a list of groups you might be interested in learning more about below:

America's Future Foundation - "America’s Future Foundation was founded in
1995 by a group of young conservatives and libertarians in Washington,
DC. Today, AFF is the premier non-profit network of young conservative
and libertarian leaders, nationwide. ...

AFF today has exceeded the expectations of its founders. Hundreds of
people attend AFF roundtables and social events, and thousands of
visitors surf the AFF website each month. AFF members read Doublethink
magazine and attend leadership dinners that attract high-profile
speakers. Today, AFF hosts events in cities around the country. As
AFF’s membership and reputation continue to grow, the organization will
continue its role as a breeding ground for the leaders of America’s
future."

Liberty on the Rocks - "Liberty on the Rocks is a grass-roots organization
whose goal is to help people establish social environments to unite
liberty-minded individuals not only with one another, but also with the
freedom-based organizations in their local communities. Liberty on the
Rocks will work with all liberty-oriented organizations and/or groups
to connect them with their local social network, so they may better
expose their message and the information they produce to freedom-minded
individuals in their community.

All Liberty on the Rocks chapters are meant to provide a place for
individuals to meet and network with each other, gain and disseminate
knowledge on the importance of limited government, free markets and
individual rights and to learn more about what is going on in their
local communities to enhance individual freedoms. It is our belief that
those in this country have a right to protect their liberties, and it
is only they, not the politicians in Washington, who have the power to
do so."

"There are two Affordable Care Acts. There's the legislation passed by Congress in 2009, and then there's the mythical Affordable Care Act – the perfidious 'government takeover' decried and demagogued by so many conservatives (and quite a few liberals). The former is quite popular, the latter gets decidedly mixed reviews."

"This afternoon, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals in Atlanta ruled that the individual mandate in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA), more commonly known as Obamacare, is unconstitutional. The carefully worded and thorough (over 300 page) set of opinions may be a bit mind-numbing for the uninitiated, but they are a joy to read for those of...

According to Peter Suderman, the AARP endorsement of Obamacare seemed like a good idea at the time, but is increasingly growing less appealing to AARP's members and employees. One reason for the increased dissatisfaction with the law is the fact that AARP...

"The new health care law is known as the Affordable Care Act. But Democrats in Congress and advocates for low-income people say coverage may be unaffordable for millions of Americans because of a cramped reading of the law by the administration and by the Internal Revenue Service in particular.

Under rules proposed by the service, some working-class families would be unable to afford...

"All eyes will be on the Supreme Court on Thursday morning, as justices are expected to hand down their ruling on the controversial healthcare reform law passed by President Barack Obama and a Democratically-controlled Congress in 2010."

"Two-thirds of Americans say the U.S. Supreme Court should throw out either the individual mandate in the federal health care law or the law in its entirety, signaling the depth of public disagreement with that element of the Affordable Care Act.

This ABC News/Washington Post poll finds that Americans oppose the law overall by 52-41 percent. And 67 percent believe the high court should...

"In an interview with The Daily Caller, the president of the American Medical Student Association (ASMA) praised President Barack Obama's health-care overhaul, denying that it is a 'political' issue and insisting that medical students are better equipped to determine the best course for U.S. health care than seasoned but less idealistic physicians."

In this brief speech, Dennis Lockhart discusses why many businesses are not hiring during the recession. According to Lockhart, one of the big reasons behind this is uncertainty over the upcoming healthcare bill.

"The Catholic University of America has joined dozens of Catholic institutions across the country in filing suit against the U.S. government because the administration has refused to take seriously our profoundly held conviction that the mandate from the Department of Health and Human Services intrudes on our constitutionally protected religious liberty by attempting to compel us to provide surgical sterilization and contraceptives to those whom we insure."

"President Obama's national health care law will cost $1.76 trillion over a decade, according to a new projection released today by the Congressional Budget Office, rather than the $940 billion forecast when it was signed into law."

"Earlier this week, the Congressional Budget Office released its revised estimates of what Obamacare will cost, now that the Supreme Court has weighed in. As I read the report, it occurred to me to ask: how have the CBO's estimates changed over time? It turns out that, even when you compare the years that are common to each CBO report, a clear trend emerges. Today, the CBO believes that...

"President Obama has called Rep. Paul Ryan's budget 'an attempt to impose a radical vision on our country,' but as this week's chart illustrates, if something radical doesn't happen, entitlement spending will nearly double by 2050. The amount of spending on Medicare, Medicaid, Social Security and Obamacare subsidies will soar over the next 38 years, leaving future generations with an alarming...

"The Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP, formerly the State Children's Health Insurance Program (SCHIP)) was created by the Balanced Budget Act of 1997, enacted Title XXI of the Social Security Act, and has allocated about $20 billion over 10 years to help states insure low-income children who are ineligible for Medicaid but cannot afford private insurance. States receive an enhanced...

Despite a few recent rulings declaring the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act unconstitutional, Ian Millhiser insists that the Act is not outside constitutional bounds. Millhiser argues that Congress has power to tax, "regulate the...

"The Obama administration's decision requiring church-affiliated employers to cover birth control was bound to cause an uproar among Roman Catholics and members of other faiths, no matter their beliefs on contraception."

Setting the stage for a historic constitutional confrontation over federal power, the Supreme Court on Monday granted three separate cases on the constitutionality of the new federal health care law....

"An April Kaiser Family Foundation Tracking Poll found that only 51 percent of respondents believed they had enough information about how the law would affect them personally. However, when asked their opinion about specific provisions of the law -- 'the law will prohibit insurance companies from charging women higher premiums than men' -- typically a strong majority approved. When voters...

This piece provides an interesting analysis on the unintended consequences of the individual mandate. Goodman discusses the problem of "free riders" and then shows how the individual mandate could actually encourage "free riders" rather than eliminate them. Furthermore, Goodman explains the flaws with the current system and then briefly describes a...

"The American Medical Association lost 5 percent of its membership last year as the physician group faced fallout from its endorsement of Obamacare and refusal to retreat from the law's most controversial provisions."

Responding to a column by Peter Orszag in which he declared that Obamacare "is an essential element to keeping future health care costs down," Veronique de Rugy argues that "ObamaCare has nothing to do with cutting costs." Ms. de Rugy then uses a...

"When an Obamacare regulations goes into effect tomorrow, 47 million women will benefit from the guaranteed coverage of preventive services — including contraception coverage — without co-pays. The new rules will require most insurance plans to begin including the services at no additional cost at the next renewal date that falls on or after August 1, according to a news release from the...

"Five days ago, Democrats were cheering the selection of Paul Ryan as Mitt Romney's choice for Vice President. Democrats thought that Ryan's efforts at Medicare reform would terrify seniors (with their encouragement, of course), thereby handing the election to President Obama. Contrary to their expectations, however, it has been the Obama campaign that has been forced to defend its $716...

This brief article reports on public opinion polling for Obamacare. From March 2010 to March 2011, public support for repeal of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act only dropped 1% (from 55% to 54%). However, as...

"The latest analysis of health care reform – out today from bean counters at Medicare – shows reform will raise health care spending slightly over the next 10 years, not reduce it as promised by President Obama. That won't make selling it on the stump any easier. Yet there's a glimmer of hope in the out years of the 10-year projection that the plan will begin to 'bend the cost curve.'"

"In February 2009, as the Obama administration was beginning to make its pitch for a major health care overhaul, then-White House budget director Peter Orszag made his closing pitch for the law at a summit in Washington: 'To my fellow budget hawks in this room and in the rest of the country, let me be very clear: health care reform is entitlement reform,' he said. 'The path of fiscal...

Commenting on the court battle over the constitutionality of Obamacare, Doug Bandow declares that "we all have much at stake in maintaining the Constitution's limits on federal power." Bandow uses this article to briefly discuss state vs. federal jurisdiction, while also...

"A pivotal moment in the health care debate came when the president went before Congress and said this: 'Millions of our citizens do not now have a full measure of opportunity to achieve and enjoy good health. Millions do not now have protection or security against the economic effects of sickness. The time has arrived for action to help them attain that opportunity and that protection.'

"We're probably going to be talking about the Affordable Care Act a lot between now and November. So it's worth taking a look at what actually pays for the health-care law and what that means for the future of Medicare and other programs.

There are two broad ways that Congress paid for the health-care law: It cut into government spending and created provisions that raise revenue, giving...

"There are 600,000 physicians in America who care for the 48 million seniors on Medicare. Of the $716 billion that the Affordable Care Act cuts from the program over the next ten years, the largest chunk—$415 billion—comes from slashing Medicare's reimbursement rates to hospitals, nursing homes, and doctors. This significant reduction in fees is driving many doctors to stop accepting new...

This article offers a clear, concise description of the Medicare reimbursement process. Included in the piece is information regarding the cost the doctor charges, the patient's portion of the payment, and the amount that Medicare actually gives...

"President Obama's health care reform law, which expands preventative care and lets young people remain on their parents' health insurance plans well into their 20s, is a central part of his election year pitch to college students.

And perhaps nowhere are students more critical to the president's re-election chances than in North Carolina, a state jam-packed with colleges and...

In studying the House and Senate health care bills, Michael Cannon found that Obamacare would affect the wages of the poor as well as the wealthy. According to Cannon, the individual mandate would discourage hard work and economic progress. Cannon also notes that the...

Although Jonathan Turley believes that "strong arguments can be made for health care reform and the individual mandate," he also declares that "these are matters that should not be decided by mere fiat of Congress but rather by the courts." This...

"Ordinary people — not just a small fringe group of zealots — are really afraid today. They see the country they adore being attacked at all levels; they see their freedoms under assault, their life savings genuinely in jeopardy, an endlessly anemic economy, a longer period of sustained unemployment than we've experienced in a half-century and a national financial crisis, born of world-...

Describing the court decision in which Judge Roger Vinson struck down the individual mandate portion of Obamacare, Thomas Miller notes how the Obama administration's lawyers unintentionally backed themselves into a corner with their argument. Miller also describes the clear court...

"Are you having trouble finding a doctor who will see you? If not, give it another year and a half. A doctor shortage is on its way.

Most provisions of the Obama health law kick in on Jan. 1, 2014. Within the decade after that, an additional 30 million people are expected to acquire health plans—and if the economic studies are correct, they will try to double their use of the health-...

"Many states are waiting for a Supreme Court decision or even the November election results, to see whether central elements of the new [Health Care] law might be overturned or repealed. But that will be too late to start work. By Jan. 1, 2013, the Obama administration will decide whether each state is ready to run its own exchange or whether the federal government should do the job instead...

"Sen. Marco Rubio (R-Fla.) introduced a bill on Monday that would override the Obama administration's new rule on birth control coverage and allow religious hospitals, universities, and other organizations that morally oppose contraception to refuse to cover it for their employees."

"Two years ago, when introducing then promptly enacting Obamacare, the president stated that healthcare law reform would not cost a penny over $1 trillion ($900 billion to be precise), and that it would not add 'one dime' to the debt. It appears that this estimate may have been slightly optimistic… by a factor of 1700%."

"Recently on 'Meet the Press,' Republican presidential candidate Mitt Romney raised eyebrows when he promised to keep portions of President Obama's health care law in place if elected. The two candidates will no doubt spar over how they'll deal with health reform in the debates, which kick off this month."

Comparing the single payer health care system to the Wizard of Oz,Bob Moffit suggests that "some in Congress want to make the Wizard even more powerful." Moffit demonstrates this assertion by describing the changes that Congress wanted to make to Medicare payments during the Summer of 2009. According to Moffit, these changes...

"Missouri voters on Tuesday overwhelmingly rejected a key provision of President Barack Obama's health care law, sending a clear message of discontent to Washington and Democrats less than 100 days before the midterm elections.

About 71 percent of Missouri voters backed a ballot measure, Proposition C, that would prohibit the...

"Obamacare has suffered a devastating blow. On Friday, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals ruled that the individual mandate in President Barack Obama’s signature health care legislation is unconstitutional. With its ruling, the court affirmed the principle that the Constitution means what it says—Congress does not have unfettered power to force the American people to comply with any and all...

"Amid continued concern about errors by overworked medical residents, hospitals would be forced to curtail shifts and increase supervision of some doctors-in-training under proposed new guidelines for residency programs released Wednesday."

"The Congressional Budget Office has estimated that Obamacare will reduce the deficit, by coupling a multi-trillion-dollar expansion of federal health spending with cuts to Medicare and higher taxes. Now, a new study by a Medicare trustee suggests that the law will actually increase deficits, over the next ten years, by between $346 and $527 billion. Why do the trustee's numbers differ from...

This article describes how the implementation of Obamacare effects ethical and moral issues. Donovan specifically discusses the impacts of PPACA on abortion procedures and funding. Among other things, Obamacare "fails to adequately...

As evidenced by lawsuits and other legal maneuvers, many legislators across the country are committed to repealing Obamacare. As Michael Cannon notes, however, many of these same, repeal-minded authorities are actually aiding and abetting the implementation of Obamacare...

"The Affordable Care Act (ObamaCare) has been knocked for its alleged unintended consequences. The bill's attracted speculation that workers will lose their health plans, college grads will stop looking for jobs, and even that fewer people will get married.

Those are just the effects related to insurance regulations. Less attention has been given to how hospitals and health systems...

"Negative signs abound for the medical community today, as the House Oversight Committee prepares to hear testimony on the impact of ObamaCare on doctors and patients. First, there's the recent Doctor Patient Medical Association poll, which found 90 percent of doctors say the medical system is on the wrong track and 83 percent are thinking about quitting...:

"Last March, I wrote a detailed piece on why Obamacare will dramatically increase the cost of insurance for young people. Yesterday, Louise Radnofsky of the Wall Street Journal reported that some colleges are dropping their student health plans for the new academic year, because the new law increases the cost of those plans by as much as 1,112 percent. And no, that's not a typo."

"Thanks to Obamacare, the uninsured rate in the U.S. dropped in 2011 to 15.7 percent from 16.3 percent in 2010, and 1.4 million Americans have health insurance now who did not have coverage a year ago, according to data from the Census Bureau. 2011 was the first year in more than a decade in which the number of people with private health insurance remained steady."

"The Supreme Court just upheld the Affordable Care Act as constitutional, affirming Congress' authority to require Americans to purchase health insurance coverage.
It's no doubt an understatement to describe this as a huge victory for the law, and the Obama administration. The Affordable Care Act – after spending two years in legal limbo – now has the court's backing to move forward. That does not, however, mean the law has smooth sailing ahead. Many obstacles still stand in the law's way, ones that could derail its success nearly as much as an adverse legal ruling. Here's a rundown of what the law faces in coming months."

"President Obama's new mandate requiring all employers to purchase insurance coverage for their employees that includes abortion-inducing drugs, sterilization and contraception is an outrage, of course.
But what kind of outrage is it? Most of the public outcry has understandably centered around the mandate's assault on religious liberty."

"Catholic institutions filed a series of lawsuits yesterday seeking to vindicate their rights under the First Amendment and the Religious Freedom Restoration Act. At issue is the regulation mandating that all employer-provided insurance policies cover birth control, including sterilization procedures and abortifacient drugs, in violation of church teachings."

According to Warner Huston, "111 companies and organizations were granted waivers by Obama’s Dept. of Health and Human Services so that they could get out of having to comply with Obamacare and unions were...

According to Robert Moffit, "[n]o class of American professionals will be more negatively impacted by the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act than physicians." Moffit goes on to say that "physicians will...

According to Robert Moffit, senior citizens will especially experience an increased burden through the changes made to Medicare under the PPACA. Moffit lists increased taxes, funding cuts, and fewer doctors as some of the different changes...

"In 1850, the French economist Frederic Bastiat wrote 'That Which Is Seen and That Which Is Not Seen,' in which he noted that, while politicians liked to trumpet the visible benefits of their largess, there were often unseen costs and consequences that resulted from those policies.

"In anticipation of the Supreme Court's Obamacare decision, it is important to remember that the constitutionality of the individual mandate isn't the only problem with the law. Here's a list of Obamacare's five most destructive impacts on America's seniors."

This brief article offers several charts which detail the basic operating costs of a normal hospital. The charts give a breakdown of costs and include information regarding salaries, benefits, and other expenses that hospitals deal with.

This piece provides a brief look at the components of an individual mandate in regards to health care. According to this piece, "[o]ne impetus for individual mandates is to increase enrollment of younger, healthier people into insurance pools in order to...

"Private-sector job creation initially recovered from the recession at a normal rate, leading to predictions last year of a 'Recovery Summer.' Since April 2010, however, net private-sector job creation has stalled. Within two months of the passage of Obamacare, the job market stopped improving. This suggests that businesses are not exaggerating when they tell pollsters that the new health care...

According to Minnesota Rep. Michele Bachmann, Congress experienced a startling revelation about Obamacare in early 2011. In the words of Rep. Bachmann, "over $105 billion was hidden in the Obamacare legislation to fund the implementation of Obamacare."...

"Lawmakers in South Dakota have proposed a bill that would require all adults to own guns, a measure intended as a protest against the individual mandate for health insurance included in President Barack Obama’s health reform law.

Adults over the age of 21 would have to buy a gun 'sufficient to provide for their ordinary self-...

In discussing the Senate portion of the PPACA, Robert Book notes that the bill "include[s] provisions that could put private health plans out of business." Book goes on to say that the bill would specifically create the following scenario:

"Give federal regulators the power to define minimum benefit packages;

This article reports on the Obama administration's response to the court ruling which determined that the individual mandate of Obamacare was unconstitutional. According to Millman, Obama officials argued that the decision would...

"A narrowly divided Supreme Court upheld President Obama's health care law Thursday in a complex opinion that gives the president a major election-year victory.
The historic 5-4 decision will affect the way Americans receive and pay for their personal medical care in the future. It upholds the individual mandate that most Americans get health insurance or pay a penalty — and it was the penalty, or tax, that ultimately saved the law."

"The Supreme Court's decision to uphold President Barack Obama's health care law follows a century of debate over what role the government should play in helping people in the United States afford medical care."

As the title suggests, Ezra Klein uses this piece to make a case for the necessity of the individual mandate. Klein declares, "Kill the individual mandate and you're probably killing the bill, too. The mandate is what keeps average premium costs low,...

In this piece, John Vinci explains the six types of waivers that companies and individuals are receiving under the new health care law. According to Vinci, "Obamacare waivers not only evidence a poorly conceived law, but the very...

"Since passage of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), the American Action Forum (AAF) has tracked the state of its regulatory implementation. To date, the ACA has imposed a total of $27.6 billion in new regulations – at least $20.4 billion in lifetime costs on private entities and $7.2 billion in increased burdens on state budgets. In this paper AAF examines how this $27.6 billion in new costs...

"Reducing hospital readmission rates has captured the imagination of U.S. policymakers because readmissions are common and costly and their rates vary — and at least in theory, a reasonable fraction of readmissions should be preventable. Policymakers therefore believe that reducing readmission rates represents a unique opportunity to simultaneously improve care and reduce costs. As part of the...

Commenting on the newly elected leaders of 2010 and their reform-minded approach to governing, Peter Orszag presents his beliefs on why the health care law should not be repealed. According to Orszag, the Obamacare law focused on "cost-effectiveness and...

This piece reports on a New York union's intention to stop covering the children of some of their members. The decision was made due to increasing costs, which the union partly attributes to the implementation of the Patient...

Commenting on Nancy Pelosi's statement on the need to pass the PPACA, Marguerite Higgins declares that her comment revealed the condescension the 111th Congress felt toward the American people. However,...

"But the justices found fault with part of the health-care law's expansion of Medicaid, a joint federal-state insurance program for the poor. The justices gave states the option of sitting out the law's Medicaid expansion without losing existing funding for the program."

This article reports on Speaker Nancy Pelosi's views on the constitutionality of Obamacare's individual mandate provision. When CNS News posed the constitutionality question, Speaker Pelosi responded, "Are you serious?" According to a Pelosi spokesperson, the Speaker responded...

"One of the primary goals of the Affordable Care Act (ACA), commonly referred to as Obamacare, is to reduce the number of uninsured residents. One key provision aimed at that objective is the expansion of Medicaid. The Supreme Court, however, dealt a serious blow to the Obamacare's Medicaid expansion by essentially making the expansion optional for states."

"This week, the U.S. Supreme Court considers the case challenging the Obama administration health care plan's requirement that most Americans purchase a government-approved health insurance plan by 2014. The court should rule that this individual mandate is unconstitutional. To do otherwise would give Congress almost unlimited power."

"A recent survey by the Doctor Patient Medical Association Foundation reveals that 83 percent of physicians surveyed are thinking of quitting because of Obamacare, and 90 percent feel that the U.S. health care system is now heading in the wrong direction."

"Health care costs for a family of four rose again in 2011, with employees paying a much larger share of the rising expenses, according to a new industry report Wednesday.

American families who are insured through their jobs average health care costs of $19,393 this year, up 7.3%, or $1,319 from last year, according to independent actuarial and health care consulting firm Milliman Inc...

"The ACA's $27.6 billion in new regulations represent a cost floor, and not a ceiling to implement the ACA. Most private entities will feel these costs and $7.2 billion of the added regulatory burdens fall directly on state budgets."

"The first category, the cuts to government spending, accounts for $741 billion of the health law's financing. It's mostly changes to how the government pays the doctors and hospitals who provide care to Medicaid and Medicare patients. Here's how those changes break down, per the CBO...."

"The 2012 MMI cost is $20,728, an increase of $1,335, or 6.9% over 2011. The rate of increase is not as high as in the past, but the total dollar increase was still a record. This is the first year the average cost of healthcare for the typical American family of four has surpassed $20,000."

"In 2010, the CBO estimated that Obamacare's spending on new programs would amount to $929 billion from 2013-2019, and a ten-year cost of $944 billion. Those figures increased to $956 billion and $1,442 billion respectively in 2011, and $1,053 billion and $1,856 billion in 2012."

"In 2010, the CBO estimated that Obamacare's tax increases would amount to $626 billion from 2013-2019, and $631 billion over ten years. In 2011, the CBO estimated totals of $624 and $968 billion, respectively."

"In 2011, the dollars spent per capita were highest for professional procedures ($1,566), and lowest for prescriptions ($773). The 1.0 percent growth in spending on prescriptions was lower than the 2.4 percent growth for 2010 (Figure 2)."

An individual mandate will result in an increase in government spending of about 1–6 percent, as shown in Table 1. Because the subsidy cost is all borne by government, as the size of the subsidy increases, so will government spending.

We examined the public cost (subsidies plus Medicaid spending) of expanding coverage under an individual mandate. Table 2 shows the pattern we observed across all scenarios with a subsidy option. The government cost per newly insured falls as the income level at which people are eligible for a subsidy increases

"Contrary to their expectations, however, it has been the Obama campaign that has been forced to defend its $716 billion in cuts to the Medicare program, cuts that Mitt Romney promises to repeal. In the weeks ahead, those defenses won't hold up. Here's why."

"Overall, PPOs are by far the most common plan type, enrolling 56% of covered workers. Nineteen percent of covered workers are enrolled in an HDHP/SO, 16% in an HMO, 9% in a POS plan, and less than 1% in a conventional plan (Exhibit E)."

The estimated effects of the Affordable Care Act on overall national health expenditures (NHE) are shown by the 'net total' curve in the ... [above] chart. In aggregate, we estimate that for calendar years 2010 through 2019, NHE would increase by $311 billion, or 0.9 percent, compared to prior law.

Figure 15 presents another way of viewing the effects of reform on family income. The figure shows family income under the case of no reform and with successful cost growth reduction of various degrees. The figure makes clear that family income will be substantially higher with reform than without.

"Four reputable research institutions have run the numbers and found that not only is Obama's claim false, but employees will be dropped from their current coverage by the millions. This week's chart outlines each of the four studies."

In the table, we show the expected total gains in life years that we estimate would result from the implementation of an individual mandate. The estimate is a function of the number of additional people with coverage, so the scenarios that produce the largest increases in coverage will also produce the largest increases in life years.

"By 2017, the average enrollee will lose $3,714 in health care services per year, totaling $54.97 billion for all such beneficiaries. The benefit losses will vary widely by state from a low of $2,780 in Montana to a high of $5,092 in Louisiana. (See Map 2.)"

"Using Congressional Budget Office (CBO) data, the chart ... shows that the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act of 2010 have left the cost curve of federal healthcare spending virtually unchanged over the next 25 years."

"Many people are still unsure what the coming health insurance tax will cost them.
Business Insider's Henry Blodget detailed the costs earlier today... specifically in regards to what the 'penalty' is if you don't buy insurance (as mandated)."

The income statement (also referred to as the Profit and Loss Statement or Comparative Statement of Operations) focuses on performance over a designated period of time, usually one year. This statement provides important information about the profitability of a hospital, including information on how the hospital gets its money and how the hospital spends its money.

Beginning in 2014, employers must offer minimal essential coverage to full-time employees or pay a penalty. When this provision takes hold, 88% of surveyed employers are either definitely, or likely, to play by continuing to provide health benefit coverage.

The majority of employers anticipate that health care reform will increase their organization’s health benefit costs. In response, most say they plan to pass on the increase to employees (88%) or reduce health benefits and programs (74%) (Figure 4).

Table 4 shows the difference in health care subsidies to be given to cohabiting couples and similarly situated married couples under the Senate bill. The figures were calculated by subtracting the subsidy figures in Table 2 for married couples from the corresponding figures for cohabiting couples in Table 3.

Doctors may agree to limit what they charge patients to the Medicare-approved amount for the services they provide, or they may charge a higher amount. Those who do agree to accept Medicare's rates for services are said to 'accept assignment'.

According to the Congressional Budget Office, the legislation would reduce the number of uninsured Americans by about 32 million people by 2019. ... Most of those gains in the number of insured will not occur until after 2014 when the mandates and subsidies kick in.

"A key factor that drove down the number of people without insurance — 48.6 million people last year compared to 50 million in 2010 — is a provision in the Affordable Care Act allowing young adults to remain on their parents' insurance plans up to age 26."

Despite denials from the Obama administration and Democrats in Congress, the [PPACA] legislation does cut Medicare—and it should. Medicare is facing unfunded liabilities of $50 to $100 trillion depending on the accounting measure used, making future benefit cuts both inevitable and desirable.

"The latest Rasmussen Reports national telephone survey finds that 53% of Likely U.S. Voters favor repeal, while 43% are opposed. This includes 45% who Strongly Favor repeal of the health care measure and 33% who are Strongly Opposed."

"Based on IRS estimates approved by the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs at the Office of Management and Budget, ObamaCare will take American job creators and families nearly 80 million hours to comply with. Over half of that will fall on small businesses."

To illustrate, [diagram one shows] .... what the trend estimate looks like incorporating all polls. As of this month, opposition leads support by 7.3 percent (45.3 percent opposed to ObamaCare vs. 38 percent in favor).

Each bill would require low- and middle-income Americans to pay an increasing percentage of their income toward health insurance. As a result, the 'mandate tax' creates marginal rates as high as 53 percent — and that's for people making just $15,000 per year.

Obamacare waivers only last for one year and are only available if the plan certifies that a waiver is necessary to prevent either a large increase in premiums or a significant decrease in access to coverage. As of today, a total of 733 waivers have been granted for 2011.

Data for calendar year 2004 show the distribution of costs as a percentage of total operating costs as pictured [in chart 1]. The most significant changes in costs between calendar years 2002 and 2004 are reflected in the [second] table.

Anyone expecting to see major changes to the health care system in the next few months or years is liable to be disappointed. As Table 2 shows, the most heavily debated aspects, mandates, subsidies, and even most of the insurance reforms don’t begin until 2014 or later.

The Census Bureau recently published its latest statistics on health insurance for the 2008 calendar year. It estimated, for instance, that approximately 46 million individuals in the United States lacked health insurance during 2008. That translates into 15.4 percent of the population. … I’ve taken those census data and broken them out by age, as shown in Figure 1.

A family policy will increase from today’s $6,328 to $15,200. If the bill hadn’t passed, it would only have increased to $13,100. ... Thus, this bill will cost a family buying their own health insurance an additional $2,100 per year in higher premiums (see Table 1).

Averaged across all levels of coinsurance, participants (including both adults and children) with cost sharing made one to two fewer physician visits annually and had 20 percent fewer hospitalizations than those with free care. Declines were similar for other types of services as well, including dental visits, prescriptions, and mental health treatment.

Averaged across all levels of coinsurance, participants (including both adults and children) with cost sharing made one to two fewer physician visits annually and had 20 percent fewer hospitalizations than those with free care. Declines were similar for other types of services as well, including dental visits, prescriptions, and mental health treatment.

The HIE was a large-scale, randomized experiment conducted between 1971 and 1982. For the study, RAND recruited 2,750 families encompassing more than 7,700 individuals, all of whom were under the age of 65. They were chosen from six sites across the United States to provide a regional and urban/rural balance.

Figure 11 shows how the new health care law will add to the burden of future government spending. By 2050, the new law will push total government spending toward 50 percent of GDP. By the end of the century, federal government spending would become almost unfathomable, surpassing 80 percent of GDP.

"Twenty states will lose the equivalent of 300 full-­‐time employees' worth of work to filling out ACA regulatory red tape. (See Figure 3) Additionally, 27 states have a burden of over $300 million in new regulatory costs."

"This week's chart illustrates the new taxes and offers a year-by-year rundown of their annual costs. These taxes will pay for generous subsidies, an expansion of Medicare and new government spending."

As Figure 10 shows, adding the cost of the doc-fix, discretionary costs, and other costs that were not originally included in CBO’s score to the legislation brings the total cost over 10 years of actual operation to over $2.7 trillion.

CBO officially scored the bill as reducing the budget deficit by $138 billion over 10 years. Putting that in perspective, if true, it would amount to roughly 62 percent of the total deficit that the federal government incurred in February of 2010 alone.

This report gives an extensive overview of the implementations and implications of the 2010 Health Care Act. Among other things, Tanner describes the PPACA’s effects on insurance plans and premiums, taxes and subsidies, Medicare plans, and the budget deficit.

The annual Milliman Medical Index (MMI) measures the total cost of healthcare for a typical family of four covered by a preferred provider plan (PPO). The 2012 MMI cost is $20,728, an increase of $1,335, or 6.9% over 2011. The rate of increase is not as high as in the past, but the total dollar increase was still a record.

This piece seeks to give a clear explanation of the expenses and profits of a hospital. Among other things, the authors describe the high overhead a hospital has and also how hospitals are often paid less than they charge.

Michael Tanner declares that the health care law of 2010 "will fundamentally change nearly every aspect of health care, from insurance to the final delivery of care." Tanner then discusses the impacts of the health care law, some of which include increased taxes, premiums, and care rationing.

In this piece, Jonathan Gruber contends that those who wish to repeal the PPACA are severely misguided. In Gruber’s eyes, repeal would bring increased costs, deaths, and budget deficits, while keeping it would rein in runaway health care costs."

"This poll was a bipartisan collaboration between the American Action Forum and the Blue Dog Research Forum. It was designed to gather expert insight into the probable outcomes of the Supreme Court case involving the Affordable Care Act."

This paper discusses the constitutional implications of health care reform's individual mandate requirement. The authors discuss the "unprecedented nature of an individual mandate," and then describe various legal provisions under which the individual mandate could be upheld or struck down.

To provide current information about the nature of employer-sponsored health benefits, the Kaiser Family Foundation (Kaiser) and the Health Research & Educational Trust (HRET) conduct an annual national survey of nonfederal private and public employers with three or more workers. This is the fourteenth Kaiser/HRET survey and reflects health benefit information for 2012.

"This survey of more than 650 mid- to senior-level benefit professionals provides a snapshot of how employers are responding to a host of health care reform challenges that have far-reaching implications for retention, recruitment, productivity, workforce planning, change management and every aspect of the evolving employer-employee deal."

As the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA) nears its second birthday, the latest Kaiser Health Tracking Poll finds that public opinion on the law remains evenly split with sharp divisions along partisan lines, much as it has been since the law was passed.

"The Affordable Care Act establishes a national framework for near-universal health coverage. Under the law, beginning in 2014, a new individual mandate will require most individuals to obtain coverage.

"This paper provides a detailed overview of Medicare spending and financing, beginning with a review of the factors contributing to the growth in Medicare spending, including the effects of the 2010 health reform law." At this point in time, projections suggest that the PPACA will decrease Medicare spending overall.

According to Yelowitz, young adults are the largest uninsured age group, mainly because they are in good health and prefer to spend their money on other goods besides insurance. This piece then goes on to explain how insurance costs for young adults would drastically change with the implementation of Obamacare.

While President Obama continues traveling the U.S. heralding the passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act and the Health Care and Education Reconciliation Act, businesses across the U.S. are growing more and more discontent—and for good reason.

The hodgepodge of new taxes that have already or will soon take effect as a result of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act may not all show up in the income tax tables, but their huge cost is still very real. This cost will become most apparent in lost wages and international competitiveness, and it reduces middle- and low-income families' wages.

This piece finds Brian Blase offering a one year assessment of Obamacare. Blase reviews the many promises that politicians declared the PPACA would bring and concludes that many of them have fallen to pieces.

The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act substantially alters Medicare Advantage and, as a consequence, reduces the access of senior citizens and the disabled to quality health care by restricting and worsening the health care plan options available to them.

This paper offers an overview of Obamacare’s effects on Medicare. Among other things, the paper describes the implementation of the "Independent Payment Advisory Board," the relationship between prescription drugs and Medicare under PPACA, and the type of care Medicare patients will be eligible for under PPACA.

This report combines a variety of the Heritage Foundation’s WebMemo pieces on Obamacare. The anthology covers everything from the constitutionality of Obamacare, to the tax burden imposed by the law, to the financial effects Obamacare promises for employers, seniors, and young people.

"After decades of evolution and experiment, the U.S. health care system has yet to solve a fundamental challenge: delivering quality health care to all Americans at an affordable price. In the coming years, new solutions will be explored and older ideas revisited. One idea that has returned to prominence is cost sharing...."

Although the new Obamacare law has been touted as a way to decrease the burden on small business owners, this paper demonstrates how the opposite tends to be more likely. According to Hadley Heath, the bureaucratic burden imposed by increased taxes and regulations could crush the American entrepreneurial spirit and future economic growth.

"If the Senate bill becomes law, saying 'I do' would cost some couples over $10,000 per year." This report provides important data and charts on the increased costs married couples could incur under Obamacare.

"During the nine-month period leading up to the passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Americans were subjected to more than $200 million worth of TV, radio, newsprint and Internet ads. Almost all of these — pro and the con — were pure propaganda."

"Amid intense public interest, Congress passed the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA), which became effective March 23, 2010. The ACA sought to address the fact that millions of Americans had no health insurance, yet actively participated in the health care market, consuming health care services for which they did not pay.

"Arnold Kling of EconLog talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about the economics of health care and his book, A Crisis of Abundance: Rethinking How We Pay for Health Care. Kling discusses whether we get what we pay for when we spend money on...

In this podcast, Roberts and Cogan declare that rising health care costs have grown because people expect free care for their small infirmities. Cogan suggests that health care would not be so expensive if individuals were required to pay for the small...

In this podcast, Russ Roberts and Henry Aaron discuss the implications of a single-payer health care system. They also discuss whether or not administrative costs play a large role in driving up insurance and other health care costs.

"Arnold Kling of EconLog talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about the death of his father and the lessons to be learned for how hospitals treat patients and our health care system treats hospitals."

"Steven Lipstein, President and CEO of BJC HealthCare--a $3 billion hospital system in St. Louis, Missouri--talks with EconTalk host Russ Roberts about the economics of hospitals. They discuss pricing, the advantages and disadvantages of specialization in...

As the title implies, this podcast discusses the many unfortunate regulations that are occurring with the implementation of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. Ms. Turner also describes some of the unappetizing changes that Americans are experiencing in their health care plans under Obamacare.

According to Michael Tanner, many of the things opponents of health care reform predicted would happen with the passage of the PPACA are most certainly happening only one year later. Tanner describes several of these occurrences and...

This podcast discusses the Commerce Clause and Obamacare and whether or not the latter's individual mandate is constitutional. To paraphrase Robert Levy, this is the first time that the government has mandated the purchase of anything, and if they can do it in one place, they can do it anywhere.

This podcast discusses some of the early lawsuits and rulings against the Obamacare law. Despite the rulings, some states are still attempting to implement the law in preparation for the 2014 deadline. Cannon subsequently makes the...

"Amid intense public interest, Congress passed the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA), which became effective March 23, 2010. The ACA sought to address the fact that millions of Americans had no health insurance, yet actively participated in the health care market, consuming health care services for which they did not pay.

"Reason's Damon Root attended the pivotal second day of oral arguments before the Supreme Court on the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA), which he described as a 'Constitutional Thunderdome.' The debate over the legality of the mandate to purchase insurance at the heart of ACA was, says Root, a rough-and-tumble colloquy about the 'the role of government in our lives' and 'what...

According to Reason TV's Nick Gillespie, the three reasons why Obamacare won't cut the deficit are "legislative trickery," "higher premiums," and "bad accounting." Overall, Gillespie argues that high costs are a regular "feature of government health care plans."

"Early in this blog, I wrote my Cliffs Notes Version of the Affordable Care Act. It is popular because it provides a big picture view of the law title by title. Since some prefer video to reading, we've created a short video of the Cliffs Notes Version. I want to reach as many as possible – it is important for people [to] understand the ACA is not 'all good” or 'all bad.' Maybe after people...

"States can require people to buy insurance for automobiles and health care. So why can't the federal government? According to Professor Elizabeth Price Foley, the U.S. Constitution gives the federal government limited and enumerated powers that confine it. The Constitution gives different powers to the states than it does to the federal government. Just because states have the power to...

"The 'Individual Mandate' section of the new healthcare reform bill introduces a paradigm shift in the role of the federal government. For the first time in American history, citizens will be forced to purchase something (in this case health insurance approved by the government) against their will or else pay a fine. Some legal scholars worry that this is an egregious form of constitutional...

"America's health care system is at a crossroads, faced with rising costs, quality concerns, and a lack of patient control. Some blame market forces. But as Michael Cannon and Michael Tanner argue in their new book, Healthy Competition: What's Holding Back Health Care and How to Free It, many troubles can be traced directly to pervasive government influence: entitlements, tax laws, and costly...

"Are you aware that over 1,000 temporary healthcare reform waivers have been granted by the Administration to organizations around the country? The reason: they can't meet the limited annual coverage without significantly increasing premiums or decreasing access to benefits. That leaves us with some looming questions: What about us, the individuals? What about the people who can't afford to be...

"Johan Norberg, author of In Defense of Global Capitalism, sits down with reason.tv's Michael C. Moynihan to sort out the myths of the Sweden's welfare state, health services, tax rates, and its status as the 'most successful society the world has ever known.'

"The 'Individual Mandate' section of the new healthcare reform bill introduces a paradigm shift in the role of the federal government. For the first time in American history, citizens will be forced to purchase something (in this case health insurance approved by the government) against their will or else pay a fine. Some legal scholars worry that this is an egregious form of constitutional...

"We all agree the health care system is in need of reform. That's not the issue. The debate is really what kind of reform is needed. There are those rooting for nationalizing health care - Obama Care. What's that you ask? Obama's idea of reform is a government takeover of the health care system. One of the most popular forms of government takeover is the 'Massachusetts Model.' Those of us...

"Reason's Damon Root was in attendance for the third and final day of oral arguments before the Supreme Court on the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA), which focused primarily on the issue of severability, which brings into question whether the individual mandate be excised from the law, or if the law in its totality must be struck down.

"The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (Obamacare) has set forth an individual mandate that requires all Americans to have health insurance. The justification for the law rests on the idea developed since the New Deal in the 1930s that any economic activity an individual engages in could impact the national economy and therefore can be regulated by the Federal Government based on its...

"Reason's Damon Root got a coveted seat for the Supreme Court oral arguments on the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (ACA). Day one of this epic judicial showdown focused primarily on whether or not the individual mandate constitutes a tax. If the justices rule that the penalties associated with the mandate should be considered a tax, the challengers to ACA would have to wait until...

"In 2006, when Indiana small-business owner Scott Womack purchased a development agreement to expand his IHOP franchise into Ohio, he had no idea Congress would pass a massive overhaul of the health care system four years later. Today, one year after that legislative overhaul became law, Womack is very aware of Obamacare -- and of its effects on his plans for growth."

"Dr. Martha Boone, an Atlanta urologist, explains the consequences of the new health care law. Because of her fears about Obamacare, Boone moved to a less-expensive office so she could avoid dropping Medicare patients or laying off an employee."

"Obamacare expands government-controlled health care -- passing the cost to future generations of taxpayers -- and weakens families' choice of coverage. Larry Patterson describes the impact Obamacare will have on his family and the concerns he has with the new law."

"It's official, trillion is the new billion. No longer is government spending talked about in terms of a mere ten digits. With the recent flurry of government spending, we are going to need another three zeros to make sense of it all. One trillion dollars is a number that few people can comprehend, let alone your standard nine digit calculator. So what does one trillion dollars look like?"

This video offers the President's and Vice President's remarks at the signing of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act in March of 2010. Lauded as a historic day, the signing was received with jubilation by the many who labored endlessly to bring the President's healthcare reform to pass.

"After unveiling the Senate health insurance bill to Congress, Nevada Senator Harry Reid hailed the legislation's efforts to 'save lives, save money and save Medicare.' Without adding a dime to the deficit, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act will make it easier for businesses to provide working Nevadans with health insurance, while strengthening our...

In March of 2011, Representative Michele Bachmann revealed that the PPACA had a hidden implementation fund of 105 billion dollars. In this interview, Bachmann argues that it is necessary to cut funding for this provision immediately in light of national budgetary problems.

"On the Senate floor today, Ranking Member Sessions announced that a new Budget Committee analysis has found that the long-term, unfunded liabilities associated with President Obama's health care law will reach $17 trillion. The Committee's analysis is based on the Obama Administration's own numbers as well as those from the Congressional Budget Office. It is a modest, conservative estimate...

This video gives the Obama administration's opinion on how much Obamacare repeal would cost the country. Ms. Cutter explains the savings families of different income levels will enjoy under the law and also describes how many jobs could be lost if the healthcare reform law is not implemented as planned.

This video provides clips of President Obama's address to Congress on his health care plan. Among other things, the President promised the American people that they could keep their insurance if they liked it and that his plan would not add more to the deficit.

"The Oregon Health Insurance Experiment is the first study ever to measure the effects of health insurance by randomly assigning subjects to receive Medicaid coverage or no coverage. At this forum, lead investigator Katherine Baicker will present the Oregon Health Insurance Experiment's first set of results and discuss further data that this revolutionary experiment will produce. The panelists...

"In a complex decision, the Supreme Court has ruled that the individual mandate component of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is constitutional under Congress's taxing power. What is left of the idea that the Constitution creates a government of limited powers? What does this case-of-the-century mean for both the Constitution and our health care system and what are next steps for...

"In a complex decision, the Supreme Court has ruled that the individual mandate component of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is constitutional under Congress's taxing power. What is left of the idea that the Constitution creates a government of limited powers? What does this case-of-the-century mean for both the Constitution and our health care system and what are next steps for...

"In a complex decision, the Supreme Court has ruled that the individual mandate component of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act is constitutional under Congress's taxing power. What is left of the idea that the Constitution creates a government of limited powers? What does this case-of-the-century mean for both the Constitution and our health care system and what are next steps for...

"One year after the passage of major health care legislation, Harvard economist Jeff Miron says more reform is still needed. Dr. Miron gives his top 3 policy proposals for fixing the U.S. health care system: 1) Throw away the notion that health care is a right; 2) Repeal Obamacare; and 3) Phase out Medicare."

According to this video, one of the leading challenges of Obamacare has to do with the individual mandate and its relation to the Commerce Clause in the Constitution. This video describes the background of the Commerce Clause and whether or not the Obamacare law violates the Clause.

"At its one-year anniversary, Obamacare continues to frustrate and confuse the medical community and American public at large. In fact, recent surveys show doctors are less optimistic about the future of medicine, with some considering exiting the medical profession entirely. Heritage's medical panel will detail their firsthand experiences with Obamacare and their...

"Does the fate of a federal government with limited powers rest in the hands of Supreme Court Justice Antonin Scalia? And if so, will he rule against broad federal powers (as he did in the Gonzales case) or in favor of the feds' right to regulate just about anything (as he did in the Raich case)?"

This piece presents a large variety of information on the services and costs of Medicaid, especially in regards to the recently enacted PPACA. "The Affordable Care Act will have a substantial effect on Medicaid trends over the next 10 years and beyond. In terms of the magnitude of changes to the program’s projected expenditures and enrollment, it...

"The American Medical Association has long supported health insurance coverage for all, and we are pleased that this decision means millions of Americans can look forward to the coverage they need to get healthy and stay healthy."

A leading precursor to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, Senator Max Baucus' paper on health care reform called for "legislation that achieves coverage for every American while also addressing the underlying problems in our health system." According to Baucus, "this Call to Action … is not intended to be a legislative proposal. Nor is...

“In this case, the Commonwealth of Virginia …, through its Attorney General, challenges the constitutionality of the pivotal enforcement mechanism of the health care scheme adopted by Congress in the Patient Protection...

"Milliman, Inc. (Milliman) was retained by the Mississippi Division of Medicaid (DOM) to perform analysis related to changes to the Medicaid program resulting from federal healthcare reform. This report documents the results of our financial impact review of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act as amended by H.R. 4872, the Reconciliation Act of 2010. Our results calculate Mississippi...

After being asked about the constitutionality of the individual mandate requirement in the Obamacare bill, Speaker Nancy Pelosi's office issued this press release. According to the press release, the...

Using an anecdote to describe how important Obamacare health coverage is to Americans with pre-existing conditions, the U.S. Attorney General and Health and Human Services Secretary bemoan a court ruling that declared the individual...

Heavily promoted by the Clinton administration in the early nineties, the Health Security Act was a precursor to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act. This Act was cited as "A BILL To ensure individual and family security through health...

This document explains the components of the increasingly growing waiver system under Obamacare. The document includes a chart listing the 729 organizations that had been approved for waivers as of January 26, 2011. Among the organizations...

"As you requested, the Congressional Budget Office (CBO) and the staff of the Joint Committee on Taxation (JCT) have estimated the direct spending and revenue effects of H.R. 6079, the Repeal of Obamacare Act, as passed by the House of Representatives on July 11, 2012. This estimate reflects the spending and revenue projections in CBO's March 2012 baseline as adjusted to take into account the...

"The percentage of people without health insurance coverage decreased in 2011 to 15.7 percent from 16.3 percent in 2010. The number of uninsured also decreased to 48.6 million in 2011 from 50.0 million in 2010."

Although the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act had many opponents, it also had many supporters. The American Medical Association was one of the latter, and this letter from the AMA's president expresses that support by stating the...

Before holding the final House vote which would eventually pass Obamacare, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi gave this speech. Pelosi urged her colleagues to vote in favor of the PPACA, noting the historical nature of the vote and declaring that “[t]he best action that we can take...

"The Patient Protection and Affordable Health Care act signed into law by President Obama in late March is a complicated bill that overhauls the nation's health care system over a period of five years.

It sometimes is mentioned in the same breath with the United Kingdom's National Health Service Act of 1946 which set up that country's government-run health-care system.

"According to former Internal Revenue Service (IRS) Commissioner Fred Goldberg, and supported by the Obama Administration's own figures, ObamaCare '...in its current form will be a needless administrative and compliance quagmire for millions of Americans.'

Based on IRS estimates approved by the Office of Information and Regulatory Affairs at the Office of Management and Budget,...

This brief document lays out the fines that will be expected from those who refuse to buy health insurance under the PPACA. According to this document, “[t]hat penalty will be the greater of a flat dollar amount per person that rises to $695 in 2016 and is indexed by...

In a speech before the National Association of Counties, Speaker Nancy Pelosi discussed the economic need for more jobs and health care reform. Pelosi emphasized the need to insure Americans with pre-existing...

The Anti-Injunction Act declares that "no suit for the purpose of restraining the assessment or collection of any tax shall be maintained in any court by any person, whether or not such person is the person against whom such tax was assessed." In other words, pay first, sue later.

After an extensive debate in Congress, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act passed both the House and Senate. The transcript of the presidential signing of the PPACA legislation reflects the...

In an address to the American Medical Association, President Obama discussed some of the many problems with the American health care system. The President then went on to lay out his plan for health care reform,...

Marking the three month anniversary of the signing of PPACA, President Obama addressed the subject with a group of guests at the White House. The President focused his remarks on the positive outcomes that the PPACA was beginning to provide for Americans, while also condemning those who urge the repeal of Obamacare.

In this short speech, President Obama delightedly recognized the support and endorsement given to the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act by the AARP and the AMA. President Obama concluded by "urg[ing] Congress to listen to...

"This report first analyzes the authority of Congress to enact the minimum essential coverage requirement contained in PPACA, as well as how a court might analyze this provision if challenged based on various provisions of the Fifth and Tenth Amendments. This report discusses whether there must be exceptions to a requirement to purchase health insurance based on...

In January 2011, U.S. District Judge Roger Vinson declared that "'The Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act' [is] unconstitutional." Judge Vinson's decision was carefully thought out and related to the Constitutional "Commerce Clause." Vinson also made an...

In August of 2011, the Eleventh Circuit Court of Appeals declared that parts of the PPACA were unconstitutional. This decision addresses the constitutionality of the Individual Mandate portion of Obamacare, as well as the difference between a tax and a penalty in relation to the PPACA's implementation.

"The federal government has no constitutional authority to dictate how Americans shall pay for their medical care. It has no right to force them to turn over their earnings for the profit of private insurers or for the 'public use,' such as providing 'free' services that a federal agency dictates people should have."

Appellants, four United States citizens and federal taxpayers, seek declaratory and injunctive relief to prevent various U.S. Government officials and agencies from enforcing the minimum essential coverage provisions.

During the debate preceding and following the passage of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, many opponents of the PPACA pointed to a CBO report that emerged during the health care proposals under President Clinton. This report noted the "unprecedented" nature of forcing American citizens to buy health insurance. Opponents of the PPACA...

"The Council of Economic Advisers (CEA) has undertaken a comprehensive analysis of the economic impacts of health care reform. The report provides an overview of current economic impacts of health care in the United States and a forecast of where we...

In this testimony before the House Budget Committee, Richard Foster describes some of the costs and implications the PPACA could have on Medicare and other health expenditures. In regards to these issues, Foster declares the following:

"Health care in the United States has made remarkable advances during the past forty years. Yet our health care system also has several well-known problems: high costs, significant numbers of people without insurance, and glaring gaps in quality and efficiency—and the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act of 2010 is not the answer. This second edition of Healthy, Wealthy, and Wise...

"Reforming America’s Health Care System offers a critical assessment of important parts of the newly enacted health care law. Specifically, this book analyzes the individual mandate to buy insurance, threats to medical innovation, the lack of choices for consumers, and the complexities of medical malpractice reform. The authors also examine lessons learned...

"This study is a comprehensive review of the Act and an early appraisal of its likely effects. It is the second report by the author on Obamacare, the first being a critique of bills still being debated by Congress in August...

"In her new book, The Truth About Obamacare, Sally C. Pipes—president of the Pacific Research Institute and an acknowledged expert on health care reform—reveals what Democrats in Congress and President Obama don't want you to know:...

"Most people initially had high hopes for health reform. There clearly are problems that must be fixed. The president had promised that if reform passed, everyone would be able to get health insurance, costs would go down, and we would be able to keep both our doctors and our...

"The American Medical Student Association (AMSA), with a half-century history of medical student activism, is the oldest and largest independent association of physicians-in-training in the United States."

"The Benjamin Rush Society aims to unite medical students, residents, fellows, and doctors across the political spectrum — as well as members of the general public — who believe that the profession of medicine calls its practitioners to serve their patients, rather than the government."

...through Medicare, Medicaid, and the Children's Health Insurance Program. And with health insurance reforms and health care exchanges, we are improving health care and ensuring coverage for all Americans."

The Congressional Budget Office's (CBO) official website provides links to publications and cost estimates on various policy proposals. It also provides future projections for different policy and budgetary scenarios.

"We are an organization of concerned physicians committed to the establishment of a health care system that preserves the sanctity of the doctor-patient relationship, promotes quality of care, supports affordable access to all Americans, and protects patients' freedom of choice.

"Across the country, Americans are fighting against the new health care law, the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act (PPACA). On this site, you’ll find a list of the challenges that are currently moving through our court system, which you can click on to get more information."

"The United States spends $2.6 trillion on health care, roughly 17 percent of the gross domestic product. Additionally, government is responsible for approximately 50 cents out of every dollar spent on health care because of the huge and rapidly growing government health care programs: Medicare, Medicaid, SCHIP, and state and public health care programs. The result of so much government...

"This page is intended to provide background on the Supreme Court's historic review of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, President Obama's signature legislative accomplishment and the most significant Federal healthcare legislation in decades. Our goal is to provide this information in plain English and for the general public.

"The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is the United States government’s principal agency for protecting the health of all Americans and providing essential human services, especially for those who are least able to help themselves."